Jon Briggs didn't even know he was the voice of Apple's Siri until he saw an iPhone 4S commercial in the UK the other day.
After recognizing his own voice, Briggs realized Apple wanted to keep the whole thing a secret.
In 2005, Briggs had done
some voice recording work for text-to-speech company Scansoft, where he
recorded more than 5,000 sentences, according to Business Insider.
Nuance, the company Apple uses for Siri's voice recognition technology, eventually bought
Scansoft. And that's how Briggs' voice ended up being Siri's voice in
the UK, also known as "Daniel."
Apparently, Apple didn't
want anyone to find out about Briggs. The Cupertino-based company even
asked him to keep his mouth shut, the Telegraph reports.
“We’re not about one person,” Apple told unsecured loans Briggs.
But Briggs reminded Apple he had never signed a contract, and decided to reveal himself.
Briggs is a tech journalist
who has also done work for the BBC, Radio2, Garmin and TomTom. He
didn't actually record all of the words in Siri's lexicon. Instead,
Nuance chopped up all those sentences he recorded into smaller phonics,
then put them together to create new words.
The person behind the
female voice of Siri in the US is still a mystery. bad credit loans Looking at Briggs'
experience, perhaps she doesn't even know about it yet.
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